Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Departure Rebsamen: replacing or reworking? – The Parisian

Philippe Martinat | August 11, 2015, 7:09 | Updated: August 11, 2015, 7:10

Who, when, how The replacement of François Rebsamen – yesterday elected mayor of Dijon – the Ministry of Labour has become the great game of the summer in the majority. He indicated in our columns yesterday that he will present his resignation to the Council of Ministers on August 19, and that in any case he has left the Rue de Grenelle a month later.

This leaves four weeks and a half Francois Hollande and Manuel Valls to find a new tenant to this very strategic post, a real control tower of the job.

The names circulating vary little. Of the current ministers, Alain Vidal (Transport) virtually stands alone rope since the agricultural crisis would give the appointment of Stéphane Le Foll (currently under Agriculture) an exfiltration air or, worse, consolation prize. Among the deputies, mention the names of Jean-Marc Germain (the former director of cabinet of Martine Aubry), Bruno Le Roux (Chairman of the PS group in the Assembly) or Christophe Sirugue (author of the recent report on social dialogue and employment), “one of the very best two or three in this area,” according to a specialist.

But the “size” of the future government tinkering is considered predominant. “If there is a simple replacement of the post of Rebsamen, it can be Vidal, a relative of Judge Holland. But if the redesign was to be larger, it will not be him. “Some around the head of state, do not exclude that it benefits the coming weeks to make a change larger than expected team. “Limited reshuffle, great movement or intermediate formula, we’re all a bit lost in conjectures,” says a familiar Castle. Another begins to dream of opening environmentalists before the regional elections in December: “Strengthening picked a team that would be ideal. “

As comfortable in this kind of exercise that his model was François Mitterrand, Hollande shuffleboard. In Egypt last week, we have seen all smiles responding to a journalist who asked him if the replacement Rebsamen was not anticipating the expected reshuffle in January: “Who told you that there would be a change in January ? “It did not escape observers that while Rebsamen said wanting to stay” a few days “in his ministry, the Elysee granted him” a few weeks “. Much more time than it takes to replace one minister …

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